Deposits of bodies in circular pits in the Neolithic period (mid-fifth to the mid-fourth millennium BCE)

Philippe Lefranc, Fanny Chenal
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Among the numerous human remains found in circular pits belonging to the fourth millennium BCE cultures north of the Alps, there are many examples of bodies laid in random (or unconventional) positions. Some of these remains in irregular configurations, interred alongside an individual in a conventional flexed position, can be considered as a ‘funerary accompaniment’. Other burials, of isolated individuals or multiple individuals buried in unconventional positions, suggest the existence of burial practices outside of the otherwise strict framework of funerary rites. The focus of this article is the evidence recently arising from excavation and anthropological studies from the Upper Rhine Plain (Michelsberg and Munzingen cultures). We assume that these bodies in unconventional positions were not dumped as trash, but that they were a part of the final act of a complex ritual. It is hypothesised that these bodies, interpreted here as ritual waste, were sacrificial victims, and a number of possible explanations, including ‘peripheral accompaniment’ or victims of acts of war, are debated.
新石器时代(公元前五千年中期至前四千年中期)圆形坑中的尸体沉积物
在阿尔卑斯山北部的圆形坑中发现了许多属于公元前四千年文化的人类遗骸,其中有许多尸体以随机(或非传统)的方式放置的例子。其中一些遗体形状不规则,以传统的弯曲姿势与个人一起埋葬,可以被视为“陪葬品”。其他埋葬,孤立的个人或多人以非传统的姿势埋葬,表明在葬礼仪式的严格框架之外存在埋葬习俗。本文的重点是最近从上莱茵平原(Michelsberg和Munzingen文化)的挖掘和人类学研究中获得的证据。我们认为这些非传统姿势的尸体不是被当作垃圾丢弃的,而是一个复杂仪式的最后一幕的一部分。假设这些尸体,在这里被解释为仪式废物,是牺牲的受害者,以及一些可能的解释,包括“外围伴奏”或战争行为的受害者,都在争论中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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